| Chapter
9
Naylor’s mood
turned vile and nasty. “I pay for sex in Thailand because
free sex is too fucking expensive in America.” He pushed
his floppy Truman Capote hat forward, maximum attitude
position, just over his eyebrows as he stood in front
of the hotel, his bare, tattooed arms raised palms up
like a country preacher. His eyes surveyed the gnarled
rose bushes, the chickens, the goat, the sleeping dogs,
the peasant burning garbage at the end of the driveway.
“But the hotels in America are better,” he said. The
Grand Rose Hotel had been his dream; his chance to set
up business that dovetailed with the Cause, his own
private escape penthouse on top, a pied-?-terre, the
ultimate hong to impress yings. As he surveyed the grounds,
Naylor couldn’t help but wonder who among the causemembers
in their right minds would come for a Monster Fuck in
a hotel occupied by the Adams family; they had patents
pending on greed, stupidity, sloth, and corruption.
“They want
a joint venture! Are they out of their fucking minds?”
He turned away from the garden. “Did you see that guy
do that bending thing with his fingers? The whole family
is weird.”
Jess held
the rear door open. Calvino was already inside the car.
He switched on the engine and checked his rear view
mirror. He rolled down his window and gestured at Naylor
to get in.
“I suspect
they will want to keep the roses,” said Calvino. “Let’s
go.” Not doing due diligence on a deal ran the same
level of risk as not doing due diligence on a ying only
to find out down the road that what she had promised
bore no relationship to what she was prepared or able
to deliver. Blinded by the beauty of the rose, the buyer
had forgotten about the hidden treasure of thorns ready
to draw blood.
Naylor kicked
the toe of his boot in the dirt, sending up a small
cloud of red dust. He waved his fist at the hotel, huffed
and muttered, and then climbed into the back of the
car. Jess shut Naylor’s door, walked around to the opposite
side and got in. Chickens flew in all directions as
Calvino gunned the engine, peeling out of the Grand
Rose Hotel grounds. Calvino’s car looked like it belonged
to the hotel; it fit into the overall ambience of broken
objects, things gone to ruin, the rewards of neglect
and accident. Naylor stuck his arm out the window and
gave everyone in sight the finger, only no one in particular
noticed. None of this acting up had improved Naylor’s
mood, if anything he was more agitated, slamming his
hand against the seat. Calvino said nothing as he felt
the muffled blow. After all, Naylor’s Hollywood show
of anger was more for Jess and him than for the family
of owners who were nowhere to be seen.
“I don’t think
you gained anything by showing your tattoos,” said Jess.
“Or giving the street vendors the finger.”
“Fuck them.
I felt like a monkey in a bag hung on a shithouse door.”
Calvino caught
Naylor’s flash of anger in the rear view mirror. Where
the hell did he get that expression? “Monkey in a bag?
Or was it money in a bag? “How does that feel, Wes?”
“It’s monkey
in a bag. Monkey is money with a “k” jammed in the middle.
I had this ying last year. Fon was her name. You know,
‘Rain’ in Thai. She gave the best blow jobs in the entire
fucking world. Rain would just keep at it. Three, four
times in one day she would go down. I mean again and
again. She was relentless in her desire to go down.
Fon had a pet monkey she called ‘Lucky Luke’ – a guy
had given it to her along with the usual gold and fridge
– and that goddamn monkey went everywhere with her.
It thought the world of her, Luke was crazy about her.
And she loved the monkey like it was her kid. It put
me off to have Lucky Luke watching her going down on
me. Her moaning and Lucky Luke looking like he had some
strange rain forest disease. She said it was just an
ear infection. But I couldn’t keep an erection. So I
made her put the monkey in the bag she used to cart
it around in. But Lucky Luke wasn’t stupid. He knew
how to get out of the bag. There I would be with my
pants around my ankles with Rain falling down and that
monkey would jump on her shoulder and fucking stare.
Those big monkey eyes, and Lucky Luke’s upper lip riding
up slowly and showing razor sharp teeth.
Fon couldn’t understand why I made such a big deal about
her goddamn monkey. I told her Lucky Luke was jealous
and one day he was going to take a run at me. I finally
figured out that after putting Lucky Luke inside the
cloth bag, that if I pulled the string tight at the
top of the bag and hung it on the back of the bathroom
door, he couldn’t get out. Then I could get down to
concentrating on business with Fon. All the time, I
could hear Lucky Luke struggling inside the bag on the
shithouse door. This dull thump, thump against the wooden
door. Lucky Luke screaming in total monkey rage. There
I was in the bedroom with Fon on her knees and her goddamn
monkey banging the bathroom door, trying to find a way
out of the bag, knowing it was stuck in the dark, shut
out, cut off from the world, and for the life of that
monkey, Luke had absolutely no fucking idea why he had
been tied into a bag and suspended in mid-air on the
back of a door. Afterwards Rain would say, ‘Lucky Luke
pai nai? Where did Lucky Luke go?’ She knew full well
that Lucky Luke was in the bag hanging on the door.
But she pretended not to know. That way she didn’t have
to take any responsibility. Today, I understand exactly
how that poor bastard monkey felt. Kitti was doing the
same thing as Fon. He was pretending not to know how
I got in the bag. And he just let me bang my fucking
head on his shithouse door while he and his crazy family
were jerking off.”
Halfway through
the telling of his Lucky Luke story, Naylor started
to unwind, grow calm, his voice smoothed out with the
rough, hard edges sanded down by the memory of all those
blow-jobs. Like a lot of angry people without someone
to fuel the fires of rage, and left alone to think about
what had happened, he put the experience in the context
of what he knew. Getting a blow job with a monkey kicking
up a storm in a bag. Naylor looked contemplative as
he stared out the car window. Thinking about Kitti,
and Lucky Luke, and remembering Rain on her knees, eyes
looking up making those sucking noises as her monkey
screamed bloody murder from the bathroom.
“She left
you for the monkey,” said Calvino. He was thinking:
what goes around comes around. He liked the idea of
Naylor being the monkey in the bag. There was some justice
in the world after all.
Naylor nodded
his head. “I hate to admit it but she did. I trust Rain
and Luke are happy in some upcountry jungle hovel. Enough
of monkey business,” he said. “Tell me again why we
are stopping at this shopping mall? After meeting these
assholes, you want to go shopping? Dr. Nat’s four grand
is burning a hole in your pocket, right?”
Before they
got into the car, Calvino had laid the groundwork for
the diversion, casually saying he had to meet someone
for a few minutes at the Emporium. As they left the
conference room, Naylor was still too upset with the
hotel owners and had not focused on Calvino’s request
and certainly had been in no state to respond to this
request. It took a monkey story for him to remember
Calvino had been leading up to something.
“I have a
personal problem I need to fix. It will take ten minutes
and then I buy lunch,” said Calvino. After looking over
the family, the threat to Naylor had diminished in Calvino’s
eyes. Not that he was easing off – after all, someone
had taken a shot at them on the expressway – but right
up close none of them seem capable to doing much of
anything but argue over their share of the family pie.
“Yeah? I thought
you were working for me. Now you have a problem and
I am supposed to approve your plan to ruin my lunch
with Jep.”
“Let’s say
I’ve got a monkey on my back,” said Calvino.
“We pass the
Emporium on the way to hotel,” said Jess.
Out of the
blue, back-up was coming from LAPD; something Calvino
had not expected. Maybe Jess had tired of baby-sitting
this Asset, with Naylor’s attitude, the tattoos, his
murky business connections, his degrading ying stories,
so any excuse to shove back had to make Jess feel as
good as landing a foot to the jaw of a kick-boxing opponent.
“I need to buy a new battery.” He was playing with the
machine that picked up transmitting devices.
“Ten minutes,
Wes,” said Calvino.
Ten minutes
should be more than enough time, thought Calvino. But
nothing in Bangkok ever happened in ten minutes. It
was a way of speaking, a time span that meant a short-time,
not that other short-time where a ying was selling her
sabbai time. Calvino had planned out what he was going
to do – he would first find McPhail and Noi, and even
before finding them, he would have Gabe on his mobile
phone ready to talk to Noi. He’d walk straight up to
Noi, and say, ‘How’s it going, Noi? Glad to see you.
Gabe’s on the phone from LA. Just tell him hello. That’s
it. No other commitment.’ Then he would put the phone
to her ear. She’d say a few meaningless words and listen
to him plead to come back, she’d refuse and then it
would be over. Some yings were queens of the quick brush
off.
Naylor was
about to say something when Jess cut him off. “And you
can buy something nice for Jep at one of the shops.”
Calvino smiled
to himself, exchanged a glance with Jess in the rear
view mirror. “You don’t want to go back to the room
with nothing,” said Calvino.
“Do I have
any choice?” asked Naylor as Calvino pulled into the
underground parking lot of the Emporium.
Choice and
purpose were the two elements missing from the known
universe that no scientist would ever locate; they were
not permanently lost, they had never existed, thought
Calvino.
He followed
the down ramp into the underground parking lot, slowing
to take the ticket from the uniformed security guard.
With no place to park, he turned right, taking the ramp
down to B2, and pulled into a parking spot within sight
of the entrance for the elevators. The B2 parking lot
level was half-full. Not many people were shopping in
the middle of the weekday. The recession had cut the
power on their aircraft, turning most of them into glider
pilots. Naylor was out of the car last. He slammed the
door hard. “I could use a drink. You think that is going
to be a problem here?”
“I’m buying,”
said Calvino.
“Goddamn right
you are buying,” said Naylor.
Jess was out
the other side of the car, closed the door and leaned
against the side of the Honda. “I’ll stay with the car.
Pick me up a new battery, will you?”
“Forget it,”
said Naylor. “This Italian is buying both of us a beer.”
Jess smiled.
“I don’t drink on duty.”
“Then I’ll
drink your fucking beer if that makes you feel any better.”
“It won’t
take long,” said Calvino. “Come along, Jess. No one’s
going to bother the car.”
Jess tapped
his fingers on the roof of the Honda, then broke into
a smile. The car was a write-off, a wreck. Who would
bother with such a car? “Okay.”
They crossed
the parking lot, Jess taking point, then Naylor with
Calvino following behind. Jess pushed open the glass
door, looking around before waving Naylor to move forward.
“You buy the
Lucky Luke story?” Jess asked through the mic. He was
scanning the area for transmitting devices. There was
always the possibility someone was intercepting their
radio transmissions.
“Monkeys are
jealous,” replied Calvino, looking over the parking
lot. “And they are curious. And on the whole much better
companions than someone like Naylor. The girl made the
right choice.”
Jess watched
as Naylor came through the door. “I am feeling better
already,” Jess whispered into the mic.
Naylor breathed
deeply, waiting for Calvino to catch up. He was smiling.
The recovery had been rapid. He had already shaken off
the meeting with Kitti and his nutty and dangerous brothers
and sisters. For a moment he had stopped wishing that
he had never met Dr. Nat and invested in a hotel venture
in Thailand. Fon had reminded him of why he had come
in the first place – to buy hongs and to hunt yings.
They rode
the elevator to the second floor. As the door opened
Calvino dialled Gabe’s home number. All he had to do
was press the ‘yes’ button and the call would connect.
As they walked out of the elevator, a farang in a cowboy
hat, late 20s, muscle shirt and no gut, swung at Naylor,
landing the punch smack on the side of his jaw, sending
him reeling against the wall. Naylor hit the wall, looking
like a stunned prize-fighter. Calvino moved in front
of Naylor, waiting for the farang to come in. He didn’t
have to wait long. Jess reacted with a kick-boxing manoeuvre,
coming off the floor, his right leg hitting the cowboy
as he moved in to hit Naylor again. The farang absorbed
the blow, which caught him in the chest. He threw a
series of punches at Jess, who easily ducked away from
the blows, waiting for the precise moment when the farang
was off balance, and then Jess nailed him three, four
times on the neck and head with his fists, and, spinning
him around, brought his foot up hard under the farang’s
jaw. The sound of the jaw cracking echoed off the walls
and windows of the lobby near the elevator. The farang
hit the marble floor. He wasn’t moving. Unconscious.
Calvino knelt
down in front of Naylor. “You all right?”
A crowd of
shoppers gathered around.
“Who was that
sonofabitch?” asked Naylor, gasping to catch his breath.
“He doesn’t
look Chinese to me,” said Calvino. “What I am saying
is that he’s not part of Kitti’s family. These people
don’t hire farang to whack farang.”
“I had a gut
feeling that coming here was a mistake,” said Naylor.
Jess helped
Naylor to his feet. “Here’s your hat.”
“Let’s get
out of here,” said Calvino. The crowd swelled as the
farang started to move his head on the floor.
“I’ve never
seen anyone hit someone so fast or so hard,” Naylor
said as he took the hat. “Where’d you learn that fancy
shit?”
Jess had won
the kick-boxing championship of LA county at age fourteen.
He had learned the art by the time he was twelve. His
dad had built shelves to proudly display all of Jess’s
trophies. But none of this mattered at the moment.
“You don’t
know this guy?” asked Jess, deflecting the “fancy shit”
comment.
“Never seen
him before. He must have confused me with someone else.”
“He went straight
for you,” said Calvino. “It didn’t look much like a
mistake.”
Naylor fingered
his hat, looking for damage, smoothing it out and then
carefully putting it on, he smiled, using his hand to
work his jaw from side to side. He stepped forward and
kicked the farang in the groin. A huff sound like air
going out of a tire came out of the man’s mouth. When
it looked like Naylor might have one more shot, Calvino
took his arm and pulled him back.
“Enough already.”
The farang was coiled up on the polished marble floor
in front of the ATM machine. He looked like he had passed
out or was sleeping.
“The bastard
tried to mug me,” said Naylor. “Just one more little
kick.”
This time
Jess came alongside Calvino and together they ushered
him away from the unconscious farang. Calvino knew this
was not a stalker, a mugger, a crazy, no, this was a
deliberate planned assault and, like the truck on the
expressway, the intent was to intimidate, throw them
off-balance, lead them to make conclusions that others
wanted them to make.
As they were
walking away, Calvino said to Jess, “You’re good.”
“I don’t think
we should be here, Vincent. Someone doesn’t come swinging
at Naylor without a reason. How did that farang knew
we would be here now?” Jess held out a small device
that looked like a remote control. “He was picking up
the Ghz from this.” He held out his own anti-transmitting
device. “They were tracking us the whole time.”
“The road
from Damascus to Tel Aviv also goes from Tel Aviv to
Damascus,” said Calvino.
“Are you guys
protecting me or holding a committee meeting?” asked
Naylor.
They walked
past the imported designer shops: tall walls of glass
and inside the robes and gowns for priestesses of fashion.
As they entered the fashion hall, McPhail spotted them
and shouted Calvino’s name. “Vinee, over here, man.”
“That’s my
guy. We’ll be out of here in a minute.”
McPhail stood
next to a ying who was dressed to kill in black tight
fitting slacks, high heels and a halter top, bare smooth
shoulders showing. She looked like an entertainer backstage,
distracted, smoking a cigarette, looking at her watch.
Long red fingernails set off her hands. She looked like
she could be a singer or a model with her fresh, shiny
black long hair falling half way down her back. In the
advertising business such yings were called “Pretties”,
the good-looking yings who were hired for car shows,
conferences, conventions. Pretties attracted crowds,
and crowds wanted to be around beautiful yings and the
things Pretties were selling. Calvino recognised Noi
from Gabe Holerstone’s photo. Calvino hit the dial button
as he approached. The phone was ringing and Gabe picked
up the phone on the third ring, answering with a slow,
husky voice dulled by sleep.
“It’s one
in the fucking morning, who are you, asshole?”
“Vincent Calvino.
I have Noi here and she wants to talk to you.”
“Noi? Where
did you say you are?” He sounded like he was drugged.
“In Bangkok.”
“I know in
Bangkok, but where?”
“I am at a
shopping mall,” said Calvino. “So talk to her. That
was our deal. Find the girl, put her on the phone. That
was the assignment. Now the case is closed.”
Calvino held
out the phone and she stared at it and then at Calvino,
slowly sucking in a long hit from her cigarette, one
arm folded around her waist, her elbow resting on her
folded forearm. Smoke coiled out of each nostril like
she was the Queen in Alice in Wonderland.
“It’s Gabe,
he’s in LA and he wants to talk to you.”
“What does
he want from me? I don’t work for Gabe any more.” A
bored look crossed Noi’s face like a late afternoon
shadow. As if a group of fans was hassling her an autograph.
Her voice broke slightly as she uttered the word “me”;
the amount of gravity attached to that simple two letter
word was enough to pluck the moon from the night sky.
She said it in a way that seemed to indicate there was
no room for anyone else in the world but her.
“Ask him yourself.”
He stood beside her, his arm outstretched but she made
no effort to reach for the phone.
“See what
I mean,” said McPhail. “This is one awkward fucking
ying.”
Calvino put
the phone to his ear. “She wants to know what you want
from her.”
“I want to
talk to her.”
Calvino stared
directly at her. “He says that he wants to talk to you.”
“If the ying
doesn’t want to talk, she doesn’t want to talk,” said
Naylor.
“Who is this
asshole?” asked McPhail.
“Her fucking
boss. What fucking rock do you live under?”
The situation
was becoming complicated beyond Calvino’s wildest expectations.
McPhail and Naylor had taken an instant dislike to one
another. Calvino swiftly moved between Noi and McPhail
as if he were back in New York on a Sunday afternoon
and happened upon a pick-up baseball game and people
were choosing sides.
“Your friend
is right,” said Noi. “I don’t have to talk to anyone.”
Gabe screamed
in Calvino’s ear, “Put that goddamn Vine Street bitch
on the phone.”
“That approach
isn’t working, Gabe. Maybe you ought to come up with
a reason to talk to her,” said Calvino. “What’s the
message?”
“I want her
to come back to LA. I’ll give her a raise. Tell her
that.”
Calvino watched
Noi light another cigarette from the one she was just
finishing. “He wants you back in LA and you get a raise.”
She thought
about this. “How much of a raise?”
Gabe heard
her response and shouted in the phone at Calvino. “Two-hundred
and fifty a week.”
“Two fifty
a week,” repeated Calvino.
Calvino edged
in with the phone until a moment later it was against
her ear and she was talking to Gabe. McPhail rolled
his eyes. “Jesus Christ, she’s entering into collective
bargaining on your dime. Can you believe it?”
“Three hundred,”
said Noi. “Otherwise I am on the plane to Hong Kong.
I can make more than three hundred a day in Hong Kong.”
“You heard
that?” asked Calvino.
Of course
he had heard it. “Noi, okay, just come back to LA, honey.”
Calvino motioned
for her to hand back his mobile phone. She pretended
to ignore him. “There was nothing in my deal with Gabe
for you to carry on a long distance salary negotiation.
Phone him back collect.”
“I’m almost
finished,” she said.
“Good bye,
Gabe,” said McPhail taking a swipe at the phone but
he missed as Noi stepped to one side.
“I don’t like
the way you treated me.” She spoke into the phone.
McPhail rolled
his eyes. “How are you going to make that kind of money
in Bangkok?”
“It’s finished.
We can go now,” said Calvino. “Let’s get back to the
car.”
Naylor was
watching yings in short skirts ride the escalator.
“You were
buying us a beer,” said Naylor, looking away from the
two yings riding the escalator. “Forget the beer, let’s
go back to the Brandy.”
Meaning that
he wanted to check on Jep. He was still on compassion
alert, and telling himself that technically he hadn’t
really breached the YINGS as he had administered care.
There had been no sex.
This suited
Calvino fine and he nodded, turned to Noi, gesturing
for his phone, as a loud boom echoed through the second
floor. An explosion shattered glass. Calvino immediately
pushed Naylor down. The force of the blast sucked a
massive volume of dust and debris through the main shaft
of the atrium. The explosion knocked out the electrical
supply and the emergency lights came on, flickered and
then cut out as well. The air was dirty and the light
dusk-like; darkness descended inside the mall.
“What the
fuck was that?” asked Naylor.
“That was
no fucking electrical transformer exploding,” said Calvino.
“That was a bomb.”
“Let’s get
Naylor out of here. Now,” said Jess, pulling Naylor
by the arm.
Calvino reached
to take his phone from Noi. “I am not finished talking
to him.”
“Noi, time
to go. Give me the phone. Don’t make a problem,” said
Calvino. He grabbed at the phone but missed.
McPhail laughed.
“You’re right, that was no transformer. Someone has
set off the heavy shit. Look at the shoppers run like
rabbits. Where the fuck do they think they are going?”
He shook his head, pulled out his pack of cigarettes
and offered one to Noi. “Anything else you need, just
give me a call. If you can get your phone back.” With
a quick flick of his wrist, McPhail snatched the phone
from Noi’s hand and tossed it to Calvino. “See you around.”
As Calvino’s
mobile phone spun in the air, Jess was already in a
half run holding onto Naylor’s arm, directing him back
to the emergency stairs next to the elevators. The elevators
had already been shut down. As Calvino caught up, they
ran into a wall of customers and staff pushing and shoving
to get down the stairs. Security guards tried to maintain
order with the crowd; yings were crying and screaming,
clutching children, and shop clerks were pushing against
each other to get to the stairs. A strong herd mentality
pushed the shoppers into a crowd – it was difficult
to bring any order or provide direction to the people.
They ignored orders from a whistle-blowing twenty-year-old
security guard. The guard waved his hands, trying to
control the flow of people as they ran around him. The
smell of Bakelite, dust, and stuff burning – plastic,
upholstery, electrical wiring – filled the air in the
staircase. People choked on the debris they inhaled,
coughing as they staggered forward, their eyes and throats
burning from the smoke.
“There has
been an explosion,” said a voice over a loudspeaker
system. The disembodied voice echoed up and down the
five floors of the shopping mall.
“The second
bomb this week,” said Calvino. He had followed the recent
history of bombings: an explosion at Democracy Monument,
another inside a police station, someone had bombed
a bar. No one knew exactly what combination of dark
forces were setting off the bombs, how they were selecting
their targets, or their demands or what concession would
be required to stop the terror. The motive for the attack
remained murky; any number of candidates might have
had reason to plant a bomb to settle a power struggle.
Calvino took some comfort from this history of bombings
as strong evidence that the blast was unrelated to Wes
Naylor and his business activities in Thailand.
“Nothing personal,”
Calvino said to Naylor. “We just happened to be in the
wrong place at the wrong time.”
“What about
the detector Jess found on the guy at the elevator?”
Jess had picked
up the conversation off Calvino’s mic. “Naylor’s right,
Vinee. That guy could have been one of the bombers.”
“Let’s get
out of here,” said Calvino.
The crush
of frightened people all pushing and shoving each other
down the same narrow escape route made it nearly impossible
to move. It seemed as if most of the fashion show audience
had headed for the same exit. Timing was everything.
And now was the time to shift direction, find a different
way back to the parking lot, thought Calvino. Jess wanted
to believe Calvino’s assessment of the situation. Yet
there was a Calvino law that said there were no coincidences,
when two unrelated events occurred at the same time.
In Thailand there was always, underneath the surface,
a thin coil connecting the events, an aggressive hard-wired
connection that only the people directly involved understood.
Reach far back enough, or dig deep enough and original
hatreds, jealousies, rivalries were embedded in the
original DOS system of Thai government and society and
all the modern updates had done nothing but patch the
old flaws and the old flaws were what made the system
crash.
It was Jess
who had a bad feeling. Someone had set off the bomb
to do a job. But had they finished what they set out
to do?
“I don’t think
we should take any chances,” said Jess. “We need to
get Naylor out of this crowd.”
“I know a
short-cut,” said Calvino.
Naylor followed
him, “Then let’s take the short-cut. I hate fucking
crowds. Get me out of here.”
Calvino ran
ahead, taking two steps at a time, climbing up the stalled
escalator.
“Christ, we
want to go down, not up,” said Naylor following, choking
on the dust. “Jesus, I can hardly breathe.”
“You want
to keep breathing? Then get your ass going now,” said
Calvino. Like the universe, Naylor’s middle-aged body
was expanding and if he didn’t keep moving he would
die.
Jess followed
right behind Naylor. He wasn’t so sure that going away
from the crowd was the right thing. Sometimes it was
easier to protect an Asset in a crowd than in an empty
place that one did not know. Calvino had already committed
them and he had no other plan.
By the time
they reached the fifth floor, the fast food area was
deserted – no shoppers, no clerks, no lighting except
a dim shaft of dusty light from the atrium. The lights
had likely been cut, thought Calvino. The distant sound
of people screaming, crying, and yelling filtered up
the atrium. Sounds of people running on the escalator,
their feet hitting the cleated metal steps. Calvino
stopped, knelt down. Jess and Naylor knelt down beside
him. Naylor started to say something and Calvino put
his hand over the big man’s mouth, and with his other
hand, he pressed his index finger against his lips.
Slowly he took his hand away from Naylor’s mouth, reached
in under his sport’s jacket and pulled out his .38 Police
Special. They took refuge in Burger King, moving quickly,
passing through tables, and ducking behind the counter.
Naylor reached up and grabbed a hamburger out of the
bin, opened the wrapper and started to eat. “I guess
it would be too much to ask for a beer,” he whispered
to Calvino.
“Yeah, it
would,” replied Calvino. They stayed together, securing
a position with the best view of the two escalators.
A couple of
moments later, the sound of male voices came from the
direction of Dairy Queen. Three men spoke Thai using
short, clipped sentences. They stood near the escalator
that led to the sixth floor and cinemas. One of them
was making a command decision on how to sweep the floor
and who should go where next. The three men fanned out
with automatic weapons. CAR-15s. The short version of
the M-16 assault rifle, easy to sweep inside confined
spaces, the barrels didn’t get snagged on weeds, branches,
or on the electrical cords hooked to coke and coffee
dispensing machines.
Jess looked
around the corner of the counter, leaned back and showed
Calvino and Naylor three fingers. Naylor kept chewing
the burger. They had moved into the kitchen. Then Jess
crooked his fingers into the shape of a weapon, he moved
his hands up and down his chest, signalling they were
wearing bullet-proof vests. They were armed, protected,
and fanned out from the escalator. One was going left
towards the elevators and restrooms, another swept through
the tables in front of Burger King while the third guy
moved quickly to the right and down towards the Food
Hall. Calvino was pretty sure that the hit squad must
have followed them from the second level, taking the
escalator, knowing they had gone exactly where they
wanted them.
“Farang, come
out,” yelled one of the men in English. “We are security.
We take you down to safety.” Broken English, broken
promises.
Sure they
will, thought Calvino.
Calvino crouched
low, leaned forward, and watched as one of the men knocked
over one of the tables and stood only a couple feet
away from Naylor. The next move belonged to Calvino.
For the moment, they had the element of surprise on
their side. The question was how to use surprise and
to keep alive.
Jess was thinking
something along the same lines only his was tailored
by his LAPD training. “Awareness. Balance. Self-control.
Skill. Timing.” The words went through Jess’s mind like
a mantra. They were the core of his training on the
force. “Apply them and you live, forget them and you
die. They must become part of you. The way you think
and feel. You must dream them. You must live them every
moment of every day.” His instructor at the Academy
said the elements were New Age nonsense. Jess had told
the instructor they had come from an ancient age.
Mindfulness
is what Buddhism teaches.
Naylor had
stopped chewing and he wasn’t showing his Chinese Triad
tattoos now. He curled up into a ball, holding onto
his fifteen baht gold chain.
“You will
not be harmed,” said the same Thai voice.
Forget just
one element, leave it out of your consciousness, and
discover how unforgiving life can be. Being forgetful
of one’s training is not forgiven, thought Jess. The
guy coming in their direction was only a couple of feet
away, standing erect, confident, holding his weapon
against his side, slowly observing an arc of 180 degrees
as he walked ahead. He was walking into the kitchen.
Calvino reached over and grabbed a coffee mug and dipped
it into the vat of oil. Two wire baskets holding raw
French fries were balanced above the oil. He waited
until the member of the squad was next to him. He stopped,
turned, and appeared to leave. Jess followed Calvino’s
eyes and he nodded. Calvino crawled forward. Slowly
he edged himself around the end of the counter, holding
his breath, watching the Thai. The man seemed to have
had second thoughts and doubled back through the kitchen
and walked straight at Calvino without seeing him. The
Thai male wore khaki trousers and a bulky vest under
his brown shirt. Then, as he turned to his left, Calvino
threw the hot oil in his face. The man dropped his weapon,
and covered his face with his hands. Off balance, he
fell to his knees. Calvino had never seen anyone move
as fast as Jess as he crawled out the other side of
the counter with a kitchen knife, which he plunged deep
in the fallen guy’s throat. He pinned the guy down with
his knees and waited until he was dead. Five, six seconds.
Except in the movies, no one ever died in an instant.
Five seconds was enough time to kill another man. Jess
never gave him that chance. He rolled off the inert
body and behind a set of cupboards. Jess grabbed the
dead man’s CAR-15 from the floor.
The other
two members of the team came running, firing their automatic
weapons as they ran. Spraying rounds into the fast food
restaurants. Muzzle flashes streaked across the fifth
floor. This was undisciplined, undirected fire, showering
broken glass and plastic everywhere. The huge plastic
ice cream cone in front of Dairy Queen exploded, taking
several direct hits. Pieces of the overhead plastic
signs rained down on top of Jess and Calvino. As they
looked around they discovered that Naylor had vanished.
There was no time to look for him.
Calvino dipped
the coffee mug back into the oil and waited behind the
counter. He saw the second Thai emerge, his black high-top
boots catching a glimmer of light. He was shooting random
bursts. More muzzle flash as glass exploded from the
cinema ads above the elevator. Calvino crawled to his
left side, slowly set the mug on the floor, rolled underneath
the counter, edged out the other side, and lying on
his back squeezed off three rounds. Two of the shots
from .38 hit the second member of the squad just above
his right ear; the impact of the bullets sent him crashing
over a table and chairs. He was dead before he hit the
floor.
“One to go,”
thought Calvino.
Jess had crawled
out in time to see the last member of the team running
to the other end where all the electronics, washing
machines, fridges and TVs were sold. Calvino took the
CAR-15 off the dead man he had shot and shouldered his
.38. Jess fired several rounds at the fleeing man. None
of the rounds connected.
“Naylor, he’s
coming in your direction,” said Jess, who was now on
his feet, running down the outer perimeter, past the
automotive, the sheets, blankets, and towels near the
elevator. Squeezing off rounds as he ran. Calvino ran
the opposite side past all the glassware and expensive
crystal. As they converged at the back, they had the
third man trapped.
“How many
more men came with you?” Jess said in Thai.
Another member
of the team rose into sight, his hands raised over his
head. He was a farang. A sheepish grin spread on his
face as he stepped forward. The question was whether
he was the only surviving member or whether there were
others.
“Hey, man
don’t fucking shoot. I’m American. Who were those guys?
Jesus, first a blast and now those guys. Hey, what's
going on?”
“How many
others, asshole?” asked Calvino, who squatted low, looking
around for other members of the commando team. But the
floor was silent. He looked back at the farang.
This looked
like the same guy who had hit Naylor in the face as
they had walked out of the elevator. But in the low
light it was difficult to tell. This farang was dressed
in commando gear, which made it difficult to play the
innocent tourist role.
“Put your
hands against the back of your head,” said Jess. “Do
it now.” He had the CAR-15 pointed at him. The blond-haired
man stepped forward, his hip touching the metal railing
that wrapped around the side of the atrium.
“Am I under
arrest or something?”
“Don’t move.
Just stand very very still and everything will be okay.”
Calvino had
come around the opposite side past the kitchen appliances
and mobile phones. The farang’s back was turned in his
direction.
“Did you guys
hear that bomb? Man, that was something.”
“How did you
know it was a bomb?” asked Jess.
Calvino was
close enough to see the farang was palming a small hand-gun
at the base of his skull. Another two steps was all
that separated him from the farang who was moving in
closer. Calvino was now sure this was the same guy who
Naylor had kicked in the balls. He was sorry now that
he hadn’t let Naylor kick him a couple of more times.
Now he pressed the barrel of the CAR-15 in the farang’s
back. “Drop it.”
“You seen
Naylor?” asked Jess.
“He’s probably
eating chicken at KFC,” said Calvino.
The brief
conversation was a distraction. A split second in which
the farang had to make a decision. On one side was Calvino
with a CAR-15 and on the other Jess holding the same
kind of weapon on him. He knew the other two members
of the team were down. Was he running or was he looking
for Naylor, thought Calvino. But where was Naylor? The
question hung unanswered in the air. The farang had
committed himself to a course of action, and once the
momentum of action started one’s fate was sealed. It
didn’t matter that this was absolutely the wrong course
of action, much like his assault that had backfired
at the elevators. The man had learned nothing. At the
first twitch of the farang lowering his gun from the
base of his skull, Naylor rolled out of a cupboard where
he had been hiding and put the full weight of his shoulder
into the farang, striking him hard from behind, knocking
him against the railing. The farang struggled to break
free of Naylor as Jess and Calvino moved in. They were
a couple of seconds too late. In a superhuman feat of
strength, Naylor had hit the farang from behind, pushing
him forward, knocking him off balance; now he raised
him up. The farang was screaming as Naylor shoved him
forward and the momentum carried him over the railing
like a diver coming off a three meter board. But it
was more than three-meters and there was no swimming
pool at the other end. The farang dropped five floors,
hitting the marble floor with a dull thud. A body hitting
with such force ought to have made more noise. Flesh
and bone smashing hard and splattering across the floor
was barely audible. The three men stood at the railing
and peered down. The farang, splayed out on the floor,
was barely visible in the half-darkness. Naylor reached
up and put his arm around Jess and Calvino’s shoulder.
“Who’s the
bodyguard in this crowd?” he asked, wiping his hands
together as if cleaning off dust. “Thought I had run
away? You don’t know me. I never run from a fight.”
“We better
check him out,” said Calvino, looking over the railing.
He had a strong feeling that the team hadn’t been sent
to kill Naylor.
“Forget it.
We are getting the fuck out of Dodge,” said Naylor.
“Calvino’s
right. We check him out first,” said Jess. “That was
the same guy who attacked you outside the elevator.”
This was more of a question than a certitude.
“It looked
like him,” said Calvino.
“Of course
it was him. Why do you think I threw his ass overboard?”
“What matters
is finding out who was behind this hit,” said Calvino
looking directly at Jess. “And we might even find who
they were sent to hit.”
“They were
after me,” said Naylor. “Who do you think they were
after?”
Calvino looked
straight at Jess who had the CAR-15 cradled in his arm.
“Naylor, you are no doubt a really important guy. But
I don’t see any reason why or how a dysfunctional Chinese
family would hire a commando team to make a military-type
assault just because you came to buy their hotel. The
expressway shooting, yeah, that I can buy. That is their
level. A couple of Isan cowboys in a ten-wheeler who
can’t shoot straight. Now let’s go.”
“Then who
were they trying to kill?” asked Naylor.
“We don’t
know,” said Jess.
Calvino nodded.
“He’s right. We don’t know. That’s why we need to check
out the guy you shoved over the balcony.”
“He ain’t
gonna be answering too many questions,” said Naylor.
There was
no need to say anything to Naylor about the drug case
in LA. The last thing Jess needed was Naylor’s big mouth
broadcasting to the world that he was part of an undercover
drug bust in Bangkok.
*
Noi held the
bloodied head of the dead farang in her arms, and sitting
on the floor, she rocked back and forth, crying, tears
streaming down her face. Calvino squatted beside her,
put a hand on her shoulder. “You are mixed up with some
very dangerous people.”
“I didn’t
know. Danny never told me he was going to do this. Now
he’s dead. I don’t understand why he used me. You have
to believe me.” Her sobbing continued.
“Noi, it would
be safer for you if you came with us.”
“I can’t leave
him like this.”
“There’s no
time to argue. There’s no time to mourn,” said Calvino.
It wouldn’t take long for others to find out that the
three-man squad had gone down. Others would be dispatched.
That’s how these kinds of people worked.
“They wouldn’t
do anything. I did what they asked. I didn’t know.”
She quickly lost her English and slipped into Thai,
the natural storage bay of words to express her feelings.
She didn’t even realise she was speaking Thai, saying
that she was afraid, as the full implication of what
Calvino had said sunk in. She gently laid the farang’s
head down on the marble floor.
Exactly who
were they? If there were no other reason to pull her
along, it was to find the answer to that question.
“You are lucky
to still be alive,” said Jess in Thai.
Her attention
turned away from the dead man. She rose to her feet.
“You won’t let them hurt me?” Her eyes searched Calvino’s,
then she looked across to Jess.
“You’re going
to have to help us,” said Jess. “Tell us about your
friend and his friends.”
She nodded,
fumbling with a cigarette and staring down at the dead
farang.
McPhail came
down the escalator clutching a Tower Records bag.
“Another fucking
jumper, man.” He looked down at the dead body. Then
opened his bag. “I wonder if they would take these back.
There’s bound to be a big sale. Bomber special. Hey,
Noi is still here. Now that’s a miracle. First you couldn’t
find her, now you can’t seem to get rid of her. That’s
true of all yings.”
*
On level B2
of the parking lot, dozens of uniformed police and military
personnel worked the crime scene; a large part of the
lot had already been cordoned off and no civilians were
being allowed inside the taped-off area. Police and
military vehicles blocked the exits. The wall of tall
glass wrapped around the lobby had been blown out. After
the explosion all the dust and fragments of metal, paint,
fabric, and flesh had been pulled up the atrium like
hot air shooting up one very large updraft ventilation
shaft. To the side of the entrance, the electrical unit
housing the main power supply was shattered, sparking
and spitting talons of fire from a melted core made
up of the smouldered maze of broken wires and cables.
Inside the immediate blast zone – several meters wide
– the scene was one of complete destruction. Shards
of glass and twisted pieces of plastic, metal, rubber
had ripped through cars, splattered against the pillars
and walls. No question about it: someone had set off
a large amount of explosives to cause this much damage.
Even seventy meters away car windows had been shattered.
Calvino walked
ahead looking for his car. Noi and McPhail walked together
behind Naylor and Jess. Calvino couldn’t remember exactly
where he had parked. They had come out a different entrance
in the parking lot from the one they had earlier taken
into the shopping mall. Finally he spotted it. Calvino
stopped and motioned for the others to stop. His car,
or what was left of it, was ten feet ahead. Emergency
service personnel were removing bodies from the wreckage.
And body parts. On the driver’s side an intact head
was still attached to the spinal column and shredded
meat and organs clung to the outer edges of the spine
and the femurs. The shoes and feet, like the head, were
recognisable as human; but the parts of the body between
the head and the feet didn’t look like parts that belonged
to a human being. On the passenger’s side was a limp,
damaged body – the left side had been sliced away from
the force of the blast – but the second victim was in
one large chunk. A headless torso with ragged flaps
of flesh where the head had once rested. The torso was
minced around the edges and scorched black from powder
burns. An emergency unit, its members wearing protective
clothing, masks, and gloves placed the pieces in large,
black plastic bags. Uniformed police stood guard around
the car waiting for the owner to return.
“Let’s get
out of here,” said Jess.
Calvino nodded
and a couple of minutes later they had blended into
the crowd of shoppers, clerks, security guards, a great
exodus of people walking, half-dazed, taking the Soi
24 exit ramp which led out of the parking lot.
“Someone toasted
your Honda,” said McPhail. “What the hell is this?”
he asked, kneeling down and picking up a round steel
ball.
Jess looked
at the steel ball rolling inside McPhail’s cupped hand.
“Claymore,” said Jess. It looked like an ordinary steel
ball-bearing.
“Heavy shit,”
said McPhail. “No way your insurance is gonna cover
this. The war exception clause fucks you every time.”
“I’ve seen
enough,” said Calvino.
“How are we
getting to the Brandy?” asked Naylor. “I’ve got a meeting
this afternoon, remember? And I want to see Jep before
we go back."
“The meeting
has been cancelled,”said Calvino.
“You can’t
do that, Calvino. I came to Bangkok for that meeting.”
That was probably
somewhere between a half and three-quarters of a lie.
But it was no time or place to argue. “Jess, Noi goes
with us. McPhail, take Wes to the Brandy, then go along
with him to his meeting.”
Naylor and
McPhail looked each other up and down like a couple
of soi dogs marking their territory. McPhail had that
“fuck you” expression on his ultra thin upper lip, making
it curl into a sneer as he clutched his Tower Records
bag.
“When did
I start working for you, Calvino?” asked McPhail.
“About fifteen
minutes ago.”
“You can’t
assign bodyguard duty like a maintenance contract on
a crummy apartment,” said Naylor, suddenly becoming
lawyer-like.
“I just did.”
“Then you’ve
seen Vincent’s apartment,” said McPhail, smiling.
“You don’t
need a bodyguard. You need a business agent,” said Calvino.
“Jess, you’re
not going along with this shit, are you?” Naylor looked
frightened.
“Let me put
you straight, Mr. Naylor. If those men were trying to
kill you, it was for reasons undisclosed to me. If it
is just the hotel deal, Calvino’s right. If it is some
other deal, then he’s still right. You don’t need us
because nothing is going to save you.”
Calvino opened
the rear door of a taxi. Others were banging on the
door, trying to get in the cab. Holding a taxi was a
New York City art form. Calvino stood in the way of
several others who tried to push their way through.
Jess and Noi climbed inside. Calvino shut the door and
got into the front, looking at the driver, a small,
dark skinned Thai with a thick head of badly cut hair.
“Rama IV Road,” said Calvino.
“Meter broken,”
said the driver, grinning. “Five hundred baht.”
Calvino handed
him the extortion money for the fare. “Go.”
Rama IV Road
was a vague, opened-ended destination that made it clear
to the taxi driver that Calvino knew where he was going
but wasn’t going to tell the exact destination until
the last moment. Such contradictions were natural components
of life on the street.
Calvino was
heading for Klong Toey, a vast slum built under expressways,
along canals, beside the Port of Bangkok.
Klong Toey
was the last place he wanted this driver with the stupid
grin and appetite to know was his destination. The five
hundred baht rip-off fee told Calvino all he needed
to know: the driver would take the first opportunity
to tell anyone who asked and paid for the answer, exactly
where he had taken them. And no doubt, there would be
men with their hair cropped short, guns in their waistbands,
making the rounds, asking taxi drivers, offering money,
for information on where a group of farang had been
taken.
Heaven Lake Press (2004), 342 pp.
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